Search results for "otos"
showing 10 items of 857 documents
Oxygen Availability, Energy Metabolism, and Metabolic Rate in Invertebrates and Vertebrates
1988
It has often been emphasized that primitive life originated in an environment devoid of oxygen. The first eukaryotic cells, however, appeared some 1.4 billion years ago when the earth’s atmosphere had already turned from a mildly reducing to an oxidizing one by the photosynthetic action of prokaryotes that used H20 as reducing agent (see Harold 1986, for review). The presence of free oxygen obviously was a major force shaping the evolution of eukaryotic cells. As a consequence all animals are primarily aerobes, using respiratory chains with oxygen as electron acceptor (oxidant) and membrane-bound ATP synthases for the production of ATP.
EFFECTS OF SENSITIZED AND UNSENSITIZED LONGWAVE U.V.-IRRADIATION ON THE SOLUTION PROPERTIES OF DNA
1971
— Two types of photoreactions occur in DNA irradiated in aqueous systems with longwave u.v.-light (Λ > 295 nm), namely, (a) thymine dimerization, and (b) single- and double-strand breakage of the sugar phosphate backbone; these two reactions are unrelated. The presence of acetophenone as a photosensitizer caused an increase in dimerization by a factor of 16, and an increase in single-strand breaks by a factor of 4. The number of thymine dimers per single-strand break is about 100 in the sensitized and 25 in the unsensitized reaction. The alteration of the radius of gyration of DNA molecules is that expected by the degradation observed. At the same time the change in hyperchromicity is very …
Changes in net photosynthesis, chlorophyll fluorescence and xanthophyll cycle interconversions during freeze-thaw cycles in the Mediterranean moss Le…
1999
The tolerance to freezing and thawing of Leucodon sciuroides, a moss growing in mountainous areas of the Mediterranean (south-east Spain), was investigated by means of CO2 gas exchange, modulated chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence and pigment analysis by high-performance liquid chromatography. Evidence is presented for freezing-induced decreases in CO2 fixation that enhance non-radiative dissipation of absorbed light energy, a process which protects the photosynthetic apparatus. The photosynthetic apparatus of L. sciuroides remained fully recuperable after freezing, as indicated by the recovery of photosynthetic CO2 fixation and Chl fluorescence parameters to pre-freezing values during thawin…
Changes in chlorophyll a fluorescence, photosynthetic CO 2 assimilation and xanthophyll cycle interconversions during dehydration in desiccation-tole…
1998
The interactions among water content, chlorophyll a fluorescence emission, xanthophyll interconversions and net photosynthesis were analyzed during dehydration in desiccation-tolerant Frullania dilatata (L.) Dum. and desiccation-intolerant Pellia endiviifolia (Dicks) Dum. Water loss led to a progressive suppression of photosynthetic carbon assimilation in both species. Their chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics at low water content were: low photosynthetic quantum conversion efficiency, high excitation pressure on photosystem II and strong non-photochemical quenching. However, dissipation activity was lower in P. endiviifolia and was not accompanied by a rise in the concentration of de-…
Water-depth effects in photosynthetic pigment content of the benthic algae Dictyota dichotoma and Udotea petiolata
1981
Abstract The effect of water depth on the light-harvesting pigments contents in Dictyota dichotoma (Hudson) Lamouroux and Udotea petiolata (Turra) Borgesen was studied. Both species showed higher photosynthetic-pigments contents with increased depth or shade. The ratios of chlorophyll c /chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b / chlrophyll a in D. dichotoma and U. petiolata were lower in light-exposed samples. In D. dichotoma , the ratios of fucoxanthin to chlorophyll a increased with depth or shade; however, it is worth noting that the 0 m (sun) samples showed the highest values. On the other hand, total carotenoids to chlorophyll a ratios in U. petiolata increased with depth.
Response to ozone in two lettuce varieties on chlorophyll a fluorescence, photosynthetic pigments and lipid peroxidation.
2004
The effect of different O3 concentrations on two lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) varieties (Valladolid and Morella) was investigated through chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence parameters, photosynthetic pigments (Chl a, b and total carotenoid), lipid peroxidation and crop yield. Ozone fumigation caused: a decrease in maximum quantum yield of photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry (Fv/Fm) in mature leaves, a reduction in the non-cyclic electron flow (phiPSII) and a lower capacity to reoxidize the QA pool (qP). These reductions were significant in the Valladolid var. but not in the Morella var. A significant decrease in Chl a, b and in the total carotenoids was observed in the Valladolid var. but not…
Pigment composition of PS II pigment protein complexes purified by anion exchange chromatography. identification of xanthophyll cycle pigment binding…
1997
Summary The pigment composition of the chlorophyll binding proteins of Photosystem II (PS II) of spinach ( Spinacea oleracea L.) has been determined using sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation, anion exchange chromatography and HPLC based pigment analysis. The xanthophyll cycle pigments violaxanthin, antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin were exclusively found in the proteins of the outer PS II antenna, with the highest amounts being present in the minor chlorophyll alb binding proteins CP 29 and CP 26. PS II core particles containing the reaction centre proteins D1, D2, cytochrome b 559 and the proteins of the inner antenna CP 47 and CP 43 bind β-carotene as the only carotenoid. The presence of the…
Carotenoids
2009
Publisher Summary This chapter provides an overview of what is known about carotenoid metabolism in Chlamydomonas with reference to other green algae and vascular plants. The biosynthesis of carotenoids and the subdivisions of carotenogenesis are described. With respect to subcellular distribution, the carotenoids in vegetative cells localize to the chloroplast where they either serve as photosynthetic pigments bound to the protein complexes of the two photosystems, or as components of the eyespot apparatus is outlined with its functional significance. Carotenoids can serve as precursors of a number of other molecules with important physiological functions in Chlamydomonas.
Chapter 16 Folding and Pigment Binding of Light-Harvesting Chlorophyll a/b Protein (LHCIIb)
2010
The major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (LHCIIb) is one of the most abundant proteins of the chloroplast in green plants. It contains roughly half of the chlorophylls involved in photosynthesis, and exhibits an unusual ability to self-organize in vitro. Simply mixing the apoprotein, native or recombinant, with its pigments, chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, and xanthophylls, in detergent solution, suffices to trigger protein folding and the assembly of about 18 pigments in their correct binding sites. A study of the mechanism of this self-organization seems worthwhile since (1) our knowledge about membrane protein folding is scarce compared to what we know about the folding of water-…
Effect of phosphatydylcholine on spectral properties and photostability of 3,3′-diethyloxadicarbocyanine iodide (DODCI) — a potent anti-tumor photose…
1998
Abstract The potential anti-tumor photosensitizer 3,3′-diethyloxadicarbocyanine iodide (DODCI) has been immobilized in dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) vesicles. Binding of the dicarbocyanine to the lipid vesicles induces several changes in the electronic absorption, emission and excitation spectra of the dye. The monomeric dye molecules exist in at least two forms when immobilized in the DMPC liposomes and the non-luminescing H-aggregates of the dye show efficient excitation energy transfer to the DODCI monomers. Entrapment of the dye in the liposomes generally decreases the photostability of DODCI. While emission from singlet oxygen (1O2) has not been recorded, indirect results sugg…